New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard Dolan | September 13, 2018
In their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan discuss cases involving anti-abortion protesters, unsolicited robocalls, and extensive fraud in the sale of virtual currencies.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 13, 2018
U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg said she faces “a Catch-22” in balancing disturbing testimony from cybersecurity experts that Georgia's election infrastructure is vulnerable to hackers and may already have been compromised against public officials who say that converting to paper ballots would result in a chaotic, error-prone and untrustworthy midterm election.
By Jim Saunders | September 13, 2018
The justices last month, in a 4-3 decision, agreed to take up the city's appeal of a ruling that blocked a minimum-wage ordinance from taking effect.
By Ellis Kim | September 12, 2018
The DNC argued the state's practice of tossing votes cast in the wrong precinct, and a law limiting third-party collection of early ballots, placed unconstitutional burdens on Arizona voters.
By Colby Hamilton | September 12, 2018
In a June order, U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska found that the state AG's Office could proceed with its own CFPA claims after finding the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's statutory authority unconstitutional.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | September 12, 2018
The Connecticut Supreme Court has ruled that the First Amendment and freedom of speech did not apply to a man who threatened a family court judge via emails to acquaintances. Edward Taupier had threatened to shoot Judge Elizabeth Bozzuto; the judge was never directly threatened.
By Ellis Kim | September 11, 2018
A conservative nonprofit organization must hand over the names of its top contributors to the California attorney general, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday in a legal blow for the group's founders, brothers Charles and David Koch.
By Tony Mauro | September 11, 2018
"Trump's speech enjoys First Amendment protection, because he did not specifically advocate imminent lawless action," the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit said Tuesday.
By Katheryn Tucker | September 10, 2018
A panel of three judges from the circuit court ruled Friday that efforts to keep the cross where it is loses out to precedent from a 35-year-old opinion. But then two of the panel's judges wrote separately to invite a reversal, saying their precedent is wrong. The opinions together totaled 82 pages.
By Ross Todd | September 10, 2018
The Ninth Circuit found that IRS agent Jean Noll wasn't entitled to qualified immunity after she followed the wife of a suspect to the restroom and refused to leave while serving a warrant in 2006 during a criminal tax fraud and conspiracy investigation.
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